WEEGEE

RETROSPECTIVE 1932–1960

AUER ORY PHOTO COLLECTION

22.11.2011 - 12.02.2012

Violence, traffic accidents, fires and other catastrophes were his specialty. Photographs shot from a close distance were his trademark: Nocturnal figures on the streets of New York City blinded by his flash. His spectacular images with different cameras, famousness gained his 4x5 inch Speed Graphic camera, were frequently published in popular tabloid newspapers of the time. The images present in their entirety a very important historic document in the genre of street photography. The images gave inspiration to many famous artists, such as Stanley Kubrick, Diane Arbus and Andy Warhol. Long overdue, WestLicht is presenting the first retrospective of Weegee’s work in Vienna. The exhibition will show approximately 250 original vintage prints by the photographer, born in 1899 as Usher Fellig, they mirror the everyday reality of the urban working classes during the mid- 20th century. Additionally WestLicht will present a selection of books, such as Naked City, Weegee’s first own publication, showing the variety of his oeuvre. Published in 1945 and celebrated as a photographic sensation, the book has become the most important and influential photographic book on New York. The voyeuristic character of society seems to be the actual subject of many of Weegee’s images. He captured them looking on, gawking at the scenes of murders and violent incidents, poverty and homelessness, riots, parades, film premieres and stage shows. Next to this voyeurism, the sensitive documentary style is what discerns Weegee’s reportages from many of his contemporaries. His work seems like criticism of the myth of a society without class borders and the predominant racism in American society. The exhibition is shown in cooperation with Auer Photo Foundation, Hermance, Switzerland.

Accompanying the show the catalogue Weegee The Famous by Michèle and Michel Auer will be available for sale at the WestLicht Bookshop. (384 pages and over 400 illustrations).

WEEGEE, around 1936 Their first Murder

A mob came running down the street, trailing a hysterical woman, one of the relatives of the murdered punk. Kids, neighbours from that impoverished section ran after the screaming woman. Her grief was the real story of the murder – her grief in the middle of a gang of mocking, laughing kids. If I wanted a mood, I had it there. Weegee's Creative Camera, 1959